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Libraries & Culture | 5 |
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Journal Articles | 5 |
Reports - Descriptive | 3 |
Opinion Papers | 2 |
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Hirtle, Peter B. – Libraries & Culture, 2002
Digitization benefits the users of special collections through increase in traditional use of materials, development of new avenues of research, and the appearance of new types of research using rare books and manuscripts. It challenges the relative value given to paper originals of rare materials as digital holdings increase. Special collections…
Descriptors: Archives, Information Technology, Library Collection Development, Library Collections

Gifford, Prosser – Libraries & Culture, 2002
Bringing the scholarly world and the collections of scholarly resources together is an ongoing challenge that involves providing a variety of inducements, rediscovering the potential riches of collections, and encouraging imagination and innovative perspectives in the use of special collections. (Author)
Descriptors: Information Industry, Information Services, Information Sources, Library Collections

Wendorf, Richard – Libraries & Culture, 2002
The conclusions reached at the conference "Rare Book and Manuscript Libraries in the Twenty-first Century," (Houghton Library, Harvard University, 1992), summarized in this essay, provide a context for the "Flair" Symposium. Some issues have changed; others have not. Newer technologies have produced aids and challenges for…
Descriptors: Archives, Conferences, Futures (of Society), Information Technology

Browar, Lisa – Libraries & Culture, 2002
Several specialists in rare books and manuscripts discuss new developments in the commodification of manuscripts and archival material and the implications these have for acquisition, preservation, and broad utilization. (Author)
Descriptors: Archives, Information Management, Library Acquisition, Library Collection Development

Prochaska, Alice – Libraries & Culture, 2002
Shared knowledge, while not a new concept, is receiving new emphasis in a global society. National and other research libraries can fruitfully collaborate to maximize the public value of their materials. The partnership of the British Library with the Harry Ransom Center (University of Texas at Austin) is one example of this. (Author)
Descriptors: Cooperative Programs, Foreign Countries, Library Collection Development, Library Collections